In a statement, the Sacketts praised the court for "affirming that we have rights, and that the EPA is not a law unto itself."

Last November, CBN News spoke with the Sacketts and their attorney about the case.

"That government's here to serve us. And they're not. They're coming into people's lives, turning them upside down, and making it to where you can't fight back," Mike Sackett said.

"The EPA, like any federal agency, is not a law unto itself. Even the EPA must abide by the constitutional protections for private property rights that our Founders enshrined," said Damien Schiff, principle attorney of the Pacific Legal Foundation.

"And people like the Sacketts can't have their dream home, and their dreams to build that home, trampled upon by an agency run wild," he added.

In its opinion, the high court also ruled that the EPA cannot threaten fines of more than $30,000 a day without giving owners the ability to challenge its actions.

The EPA issues nearly 3,000 administrative compliance orders a year that call on alleged violators of environmental laws to stop what they're doing and repair the harm they've caused.